Here, We are asked to calculate the molarity of a solution with 18.4 moles of Lithium Fluoride in 26 kg of water... To find the molarity, We need to divide the number of moles by the volume of solution in liters
»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»«»
[tex] \tt \twoheadrightarrow \: molarity = \frac{number \: of \: moles}{volume \: of \: solution} [/tex]
[tex] \tt \twoheadrightarrow\: molarity = \frac{18.4}{37.14} [/tex]
[tex] \sf \Rrightarrow \: molarity = 0.71 \: molar[/tex]
➪ Therefore, The molarity of solution is 0.71 molar...~
Here
Now
[tex]\boxed{\mathcal{ Molarity=\dfrac{Moles\:of\:solute}{Volume\:of\: solvent\:in\:L}}}[/tex]
Put the values
[tex]\\ \rm\hookrightarrow Molarity=\dfrac{18.4}{26}[/tex]
[tex]\\ \rm\hookrightarrow Molarity=0.707M[/tex]
[tex]\\ \rm\hookrightarrow Molarity=0.71M[/tex]
Option A is correct